A guide-book of Boston for physicians . ts Association ofthe New JerusalemChurch, has its library-and offices. At No. 4 isthe St. Botolph Club, itsmembership being drawnfrom artists, literary andprofessional men. In its art gallery are displayed every winternotable exhibitions of painting and sculpture. Nearly oppositethe St. Botolph Club is Emanuel Church (Protestant Episcopal);-The Boston Library, at No. 114 Newbury Street, is a privatecirculating library, incorporated in 1794. No. 35 is the homeof Margaret Deland, the authoress. At the corner of BerkeleyStreet is the Central Church (Congreg


A guide-book of Boston for physicians . ts Association ofthe New JerusalemChurch, has its library-and offices. At No. 4 isthe St. Botolph Club, itsmembership being drawnfrom artists, literary andprofessional men. In its art gallery are displayed every winternotable exhibitions of painting and sculpture. Nearly oppositethe St. Botolph Club is Emanuel Church (Protestant Episcopal);-The Boston Library, at No. 114 Newbury Street, is a privatecirculating library, incorporated in 1794. No. 35 is the homeof Margaret Deland, the authoress. At the corner of BerkeleyStreet is the Central Church (Congregational Trinitarian), beau-tiful without and within. It is the most noteworthy buildingon the street. The architect was R. M. Upjohn. Just off Newbury Street, at No. 233 Clarendon Street, is therectory of Trinity Church, where Phillips Brooks lived for manyyears. The Art Club, on the corner of Dartmouth and Newburystreets, has a large membership, and holds several exhibitionsduring the year. These exhibitions are usually of the work of. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 58 AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION many artists, while those of the St. Botolph Club are oneman exhibitions. At the corner of Exeter Street one sees on the right-handside the Spiritual Temple, where on Sunday evenings the spiritsof the departed may be consulted. Across the street is thePrince School, a public grammar school. On the first left-handcorner stands the South Congregational Church (Unitarian), ofwhich Edward Everett Hale has been the minister for manyyears. The Horace Mann School, where the deaf are taught tospeak and read the speech of others from their lips, is near remaining corner is occupied by the Normal Art on Boylston Street, from the Public Garden, theArlington Street Church first commands our attention. It is ofstately architecture, reminiscent of Sir Christopher Wren. It hasa beautiful chime of sixteen bells in its tower. This is one ofthe prominent churches of the Unitarian faith. A


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookpublisherbosto, bookyear1906